What Witness Will We Make?
by The Rt. Rev. Steven Charleston, D.D.
President and Dean, Episcopal Divinity School
As the Episcopal Church, the most important question before us is not
about schism or sexuality. It is about witness. What witness will we make?
Christian witness is the public affirmation of faith. It is how we let
the world see that we practice what we preach. Today those of us in the
Episcopal Church are being called on to make our witness. We have the opportunity
to be what we say we are. The world is watching. What will we do?
The answer is a matter of faith. We witness to what we believe. In the
Episcopal Church, we believe in Jesus Christ. We believe in the Bible.
We believe in the Good News. In fact, we believe so strongly in all of
these essential parts of our shared faith that we are not afraid to disagree
with one another about what they mean to us.
We welcome difference as the active presence of God’s Holy
Spirit moving amongst us. Our witness is not to conformity but to community.
As
the Episcopal Church we are not concerned that everyone in
the pews believes exactly the same thing, in the same way, at the same
time. Instead, we
are concerned that no one is left out of those pews because
of what they believe, who they are, or where they come from.
Our witness is to the unconditional love of God through the grace of Christ
Jesus. Therefore, we accept the risk of grace by not setting limits to
love with our own judgment of others. There are no border guards at the
doors of the Episcopal Church. We respect the dignity of every human being
and are never ashamed of who sits next to us in worship. We are all the
children of God just as we are all sinners in need of mercy.
There are no walls around the Episcopal Church. We believe that God is
at work in the world. We are not concerned that this world sees us as perfect,
pure, or powerful. Instead, we are concerned that people see us practicing
justice, doing mercy, and walking humbly with the God we believe loves
us all equally.
Our witness is to hope, not fear. We believe that men and women, no matter
how separated they may think they are by religious conviction, cultural
value, or social location are never truly apart unless they choose to be.
We have nothing to fear from one another unless we allow fear to be our
witness. While the distance between us may seem great and the path to reconciliation
impossibly long, we have the guidance and comfort of the Holy Spirit. Therefore,
we never despair of one another or deny one another for to do so would
be to despair and deny the power of that Spirit.
Our witness is to mission. While the Spirit leads us to truth,
we carry on with the task God has given us. We do not place pride before
discipleship
While we may have many disagreements between us, we have only
one mission before us. We never question the faith of the person who
seeks to do the
work of God. We believe that it is not important to know if
that person is “right” or politically correct. It is only
important to know if she or he feels welcomed into the servant ministry
of Christ. There
are no loyalty oaths in the
Episcopal Church, but there are many jobs for those who want
to help heal a broken world.
Our witness is to the reconciliation of God in a time of fear. In the
Episcopal Church, we stand together not even if we disagree, but precisely
because we disagree. We practice the radical hope of God. We embody a faith
that says there are many rooms in the house of God, but one home for us
all if we choose to live together.
It is time to make our witness. In a century already marked by
the terror of war, with zealots of all traditions inciting us into the
patriotism
of fear, what witness will we make? What alternative will we
offer? What fresh vision will we share? Will we retreat into yet smaller
factions of “true
believers”,?
whether from the Right or the Left, smug in our self righteous
assurance that we have the truth? Will we struggle over property and power
as though these things had lasting importance for us? Will we vilify one
another and become agents of suspicion among the very people we love? Will
we worry more about what people think of us than what God expects of us?
It is time to make our witness. It is time to take off our
halos, our mitres, and our martyr’s crown to stand up and be counted.
What witness will each of us choose to make?
I can not answer for anyone in this Church but myself. I do not
ask that you agree with my theology. I do not demand that you read your
Bible exactly
as I read mine. I know that you and I may disagree on many
subjects and find it hard to live together. But I also know that you
are as much in
need of God’s forgiveness as I am.
You and I need one another now more than ever because there are so many
others who need us both in this hurting world. That world, the poor and
the hungry, the captives and the prisoners, are depending on us to do more
than argue with one another. For them, our witness is not a matter of church
politics. It is a matter of life and death. I am counting on the fact that
you know that.
Now is the time for us to extend our hands to one another. We will not
walk away from the Body of Christ.
Now is the time for us to use our hands. We will not place
pride over mission.
Now is the time for us to raise our hands. We will not forget that to
God alone goes the glory.
Are you a witness? Will you join me in this affirmation of faith?
In my life I have known many seasons in the Episcopal Church.
This is the season for our witness. This is the time for
us to do something totally unexpected and wonderful, to confound
those who say we have lost our vision. This is our moment
to show the world that we can practice what we preach and
be who we say we are. Our finest hour will not be when we
think we have won something from one another, but when we
know we have nothing to lose by loving one another.
I am a witness. I believe in Jesus Christ. I believe in God’s
gospel of justice, compassion, and reconciliation. I believe in the community
of God and I will work faithfully with every person to bring
peace and
healing to the world. I open my hands. I open my heart. I want
the world to see that I am not afraid. I step gratefully into the unconditional
love
of God. I stand up to be counted not for what I think is right,
but for what I believe to be possible. How about you? Will you stand
with me?
Are you a witness?
The Rt. Rev. Steven Charleston is president and dean of Episcopal
Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Bishop Charleston is a member
of the Choctaw Nation, has served as the Episcopal Bishop of Alaska,
and as the executive director of the National Committee on Indian Work
at the Episcopal Church Center. Over his career, Bishop Charleston has
been deeply involved in exploring different models of theological training
to meet the needs of a changing church. He is an advocate for theological
education that is culturally sensitive and meets the needs and concerns
of local faith communities.
© Episcopal Divinity School, May 2006